Baloch and Sindhi activists demand Pak be declared as ‘terrorist state’

Mon, Mar 29 05:17 PM

Baloch and Sindhi activists here have demanded that Pakistan be declared a ”terrorist state”.

A large number of people from the two communities converged in front of the BBC World Service office in London to protest and observe Pakistan’s illegal occupation of the “independent state” of Balochistan on March 27, 1948, a day that has since been declared as ”Black Day”.

“This is the time the world should realize and they should, I think, this is the time for the security, for the peace and for the stability of the region, and the international community that they should declare Pakistan as a terrorist state,” Samad Baloch, a member of the Baloch Human Rights Council, said.

The protest intended to tell the international community, including the UN, that Balochistan should be recognized as an occupied country.

The protesters, holding placards with anti-Pakistan slogans, its military, and human rights violations, blamed Pakistani authorities for settling Taliban militia everywhere in the country.

“Basically, they are settling Taliban everywhere; they are settling Taliban in Gilgit and Baltistan; they are settling Taliban in Pakistani-occupied Kashmir; they are settling Taliban in Sindh; they are settling Taliban in Balochistan, because they are their strategic extension,” said Lakhu Luhana, Secretary General, World Sindhi Congress, UK.

Luhana said that Sindhis and Balochs are being denied their basic rights.

“People are being disappeared, the political activists, and the Sindhi people… historical rights, political rights and legal rights and cultural rights, they have been completely denied them. There is no law and order, they have entered into poverty and suffering and that has descended on Sindh and Balochistan,” he said.

The protestors also said their struggle would continue until they had achieved their goal of a free Balochistan.

They said that Pakistan never wants to resolve the Kashmir issue, as it would then stop receiving international aid.

“If the Kashmir problem solved, how Pakistan General…becoming…take money, so they are the most corrupt army in the world, people call it fifth largest army of the world, but we say this is the most corrupt army in the world,” Mir Ghulam Hussain, Information Secretary, Baloch Human Rights Council, UK, said.

New Delhi accuses Pakistan of sponsoring terror in Indian-administered Kashmir. Pakistan, which claims Kashmir in full, has consistently denied its involvement in abetting an anti-India insurgency that has killed more than 47,000 people since 1989.

Former legislative assembly member from Balochistan and member of the powerful Marri tribe, Harbiya Marri, also said that Pakistan has no intentions to have peace with India, and the dialogue between the two countries is a farce.

“They have no intention of having peace with Pakistan because they have to maintain this large army and the army is main ruler of Pakistan, which is controlling Pakistan for the last 62 years. So this is the creation of this artificial stage. So, they have to have some sort of dialogue to show we want peace but in reality the intentions are not peace. They want these camps to be maintained to keep on terrorizing Indian government, people and the whole world,” he said.

India broke off a four-year-long sluggish peace initiative with Pakistan after the November 26, 2008 Mumbai attacks, saying dialogue could resume only if Islamabad acted against militants on its soil. It blamed the attacks, which killed 166 people, on Pakistan-based militants.
ANI

Baloch and Sindhi activists demand Pakistan be declared as ”terrorist state”

London, March 29 (ANI): Baloch and Sindhi activists here have demanded that Pakistan be declared a ”terrorist state”.

A large number of people from the two communities converged in front of the BBC World Service office in London to protest and observe Pakistan”s illegal occupation of the “independent state” of Balochistan on March 27, 1948, a day that has since been declared as ”Black Day”.

“This is the time the world should realize and they should, I think, this is the time for the security, for the peace and for the stability of the region, and the international community that they should declare Pakistan as a terrorist state,” Samad Baloch, a member of the Baloch Human Rights Council, said.

The protest intended to tell the international community, including the UN, that Balochistan should be recognized as an occupied country.

The protesters, holding placards with anti-Pakistan slogans, its military, and human rights violations, blamed Pakistani authorities for settling Taliban militia everywhere in the country.

“Basically, they are settling Taliban everywhere; they are settling Taliban in Gilgit and Baltistan; they are settling Taliban in Pakistani-occupied Kashmir; they are settling Taliban in Sindh; they are settling Taliban in Balochistan, because they are their strategic extension,” said Lakhu Luhana, Secretary General, World Sindhi Congress, UK.

Luhana said that Sindhis and Balochs are being denied their basic rights.

“People are being disappeared, the political activists, and the Sindhi people… historical rights, political rights and legal rights and cultural rights, they have been completely denied them. There is no law and order, they have entered into poverty and suffering and that has descended on Sindh and Balochistan,” he said.

The protestors also said their struggle would continue until they had achieved their goal of a free Balochistan.

They said that Pakistan never wants to resolve the Kashmir issue, as it would then stop receiving international aid.

“If the Kashmir problem solved, how Pakistan General…becoming…take money, so they are the most corrupt army in the world, people call it fifth largest army of the world, but we say this is the most corrupt army in the world,” Mir Ghulam Hussain, Information Secretary, Baloch Human Rights Council, UK, said.

New Delhi accuses Pakistan of sponsoring terror in Indian-administered Kashmir. Pakistan, which claims Kashmir in full, has consistently denied its involvement in abetting an anti-India insurgency that has killed more than 47,000 people since 1989.

Former legislative assembly member from Balochistan and member of the powerful Marri tribe, Harbiya Marri, also said that Pakistan has no intentions to have peace with India, and the dialogue between the two countries is a farce.

“They have no intention of having peace with Pakistan because they have to maintain this large army and the army is main ruler of Pakistan, which is controlling Pakistan for the last 62 years. So this is the creation of this artificial stage. So, they have to have some sort of dialogue to show we want peace but in reality the intentions are not peace. They want these camps to be maintained to keep on terrorizing Indian government, people and the whole world,” he said.

India broke off a four-year-long sluggish peace initiative with Pakistan after the November 26, 2008 Mumbai attacks, saying dialogue could resume only if Islamabad acted against militants on its soil. It blamed the attacks, which killed 166 people, on Pakistan-based militants. (ANI)

Gilani rejects inking safe passage deal for Musharraf

Islamabad, Sep.19 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has denied inking any ‘safe exit’ deal to facilitate former President General Pervez Musharraf’s safe passage from the country after he stepped down from the Presidency.

In an interview to a private television channel, Gilani said: “If there had been such a deal, it would have surfaced by now, as the media is very vibrant today.”

Gilani also said would be wrong to say that Musharraf has been ‘pardoned’, as neither he has been convicted by the court of law nor been ‘indemnified by parliament’.

When asked whether there is any possibility of invoking the Article Six of the Constitution against Musharraf, Gilani reiterated that he was willing to do it if parliament passed a unanimous resolution.

“I am for it. We must create history. But at the same time, we should not rock the boat. If there is a unanimous resolution, the whole nation would be together,” The Daily Times quoted Gilani, as saying.

Commenting on the Baloch issue, he said the government is preparing a package for the insurgency hit province which would include constitutional, administrative and economic reforms. (ANI)

Pak’s latest flip-flop: Admits no Baloch dossier given to India

Islamabad, Sep.12 (ANI): In yet another evidence of Pakistan’s flip-flops, Islamabad, for the first time has admitted that it has not handed any dossier regarding Baloch insurgency to India.

In an interview with Outlook magazine, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, in an apparent volte-face, said Pakistan actually never handed any dossier to India during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s meeting with Yousuf Raza Gilani on the sidelines of the NAM summit at Sharm-el-Sheikh in July.

“No, we didn’t. Actually, we flagged the issue on Balochistan. We asked for a positive attitude and asked for non-interference inside Balochistan,” The Nation quoted Qureshi, as saying.

While Islamabad, till now, has continuously been claiming that it has handed a dossier to India regarding latter’s involvement in the Baloch insurgency, New Delhi has out rightly rejected the claims.

Following Pakistan’s ‘baseless’ claims, the UPA Government faced severe criticism from the opposition for allowing some damaging concessions to the neighbour country.

Prime Minister Manmohan had to clarify the government’s stand in parliament and he said that no such dossier were given by Pakistan during the meeting in Egypt.

“No dossier on Balochistan has been handed over to me,” Singh said during his speech during the monsoon session of the Lok Sabha.

Trying to corner the government over the alleged ‘sell off’ to Pakistan in Egypt, senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Yashwant Sinha alleged that India has committed a blunder by agreeing to de-link action against terror by Pakistan to the resumption of the composite dialogue.

Pakistani media had described that the Baloch dossier’s claims as true and added that it had been presented to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh with details of India’s alleged role in fomenting trouble in Balochistan and other areas.

According to the Pakistani media, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani himself mentioned the dossier’s presence. (ANI)

‘Saudi King was surprised to hear Musharraf say his visit is for Pak not for himself’

Lahore, Sep.11 (ANI): Saudi King Abdullah was ‘surprised’ to hear Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf, during his recent Saudi Arabia visit, say that his visit was for Pakistan and not for any personal gain.

“During Musharraf’s recent visit to Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah was surprised to hear Musharraf say he was not there for personal gains but for Pakistan,” Musharraf’s spokesman Rashid Qureshi said.

In an interview with a private television channel, Qureshi said Musharraf, during his regime, did not misuse even a ‘single penny’.

Qureshi said Musharraf used to consult the Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid-led government on all his decisions of national importance,The Daily Times reports.

He criticized people for calling the slain Baloch leader Nawab Akbar Bugti a martyr and said he (Bugti) had ‘refused to negotiate with the government and initiated a rebellion against the state.’ (ANI)

Two killed in Balochistan blast

Karachi, Sep.9 (ANI): At least two people were killed in an explosion in Balochistan’s Kalat district on Wednesday, the Dawn reported.

District police officer Hayee Baloch said the explosion occurred near a police check post when the police was on a patrol in the area.

Investigations have begun into the incident. (ANI)

Pak intelligence’s severe ‘torture’ saved Rauf from being extradited to UK

London, Sep.9 (ANI): The Pakistani intelligence had tortured Rashid Rauf, the alleged mastermind of the airliner bombing plot, so badly that Britain had to abandon its plan to prosecute him.

According to the Guardian, Rauf was treated so badly that he could not be extradited.

Rauf, who was born in Pakistan in January 1981 and raised in Birmingham, is described as a key figure in Al-Qaida’s most ambitious conspiracy against the western world since the 9/11 carnage.

Rauf has also been named as a possible ‘facilitator’ of the July 7, 2005 London terror attacks by MI5 and MI6.

Rauf, wanted in London for murder, was arrested in Pakistan in August 2006, but he later escaped from police custody in Rawalpindi in broad daylight just two weeks before the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.

His escape also aborted an alleged plan said to be mutually agreed between Islamabad and London to exchange Rauf for two high-profile Baloch leaders wanted for allegedly waging war against the Pakistan army.

The Baloch leaders seeking sanctuary in the UK were arrested for the exchange purpose but after Rauf’s escape the court apparently released them for want of evidence. (ANI)

Concerned US asks Pak for immediate resolution of explosive Baloch issue

Islamabad, Sep.2 (ANI): Expressing concerns over the Baloch insurgency, the United States has asked the Pakistan Government to settle all outstanding issues with the Baloch people as soon as possible.

According to sources, three US Senators met President Asif Ali Zardari and asked him to resolve the crisis while expressing concerns over the deteriorating law and order situation in the region.

Senators Carl Levin and Jack Reed of the US Senate’s Armed Services Committee and Edward Kaufman of the Foreign Relations Committee stressed on the need for complete peace and stability in Balochistan during their talks with Zardari, The Dawn reports.

The US Congressional delegation led by Senator Carl Levin, which is on a visit to Pakistan currently, told Zardari that the stability of Balochistan was imperative for success in the ‘war on terror’.

Briefing media person after the meeting, Presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar said Zardari urged the senators to try to hasten the reimbursement and supply of critically needed equipment, including helicopter gunships.

Zardari also requested Washington to speed up the process for the early adoption of the Kerry Lugar Bill, and also asked the White House to release all outstanding dues amounting to 1.6 billion dollars in order to help Islamabad counter extremism effectively.

“Payment of outstanding amounts in the support funds is important for the security forces to continue the ongoing military operation against militants,” The Dawn quoted Babar, as saying.

“President Zardari said attaching conditions to aid would be counter-productive and impart a transactional nature to the relationship which must be avoided,” he added.

Zardari also welcomed the Obama Administration’s commitment to help Pakistan address its increasing energy needs. (ANI)

PML-Q supports Jamil Bugti’s decision to register case against Musharraf

Quetta, Aug. 31 (ANI): PML-Q chief Chaudhry Shujaat Husain has said that his party supports Jamil Bugti’s decision to register a case against former president Pervez Musharraf and prime minister Shaukat Aziz for conspiring his father Akbar Bugti’s assassination.

The Daily Times quoted Husain as saying that a fair trial would be conducted against the killers of the Baloch nationalist leader. He added that the PML-Q would not apologise to the Baloch people for the actions his party took while in power.

“The PML-Q made all efforts to negotiate with Akbar Bugti to resolve outstanding issues.

“We had won the confidence of Akbar Bugti to such an extent that he even agreed to nominate Mushahid Hussain as his representative in further dialogue,” Husain said.

The PML-Q chief also urged Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to visit Balochistan to see the plight of Baloch people, and address their grievances.

“The government and all stakeholders will have to work collectively to resolve Balochistan’s issues,” he said. (ANI)

Taliban using ‘organized crime’ in Karachi to fund their ‘terror business’: NYT

New York, Aug.29 (ANI): Taliban insurgents have resorted to ‘organized crime’ to generate funds for their militant activities being carried out in the lawless northwestern Pakistan, and the banned outfit has made Karachi their hub for the new ‘business’.

The Taliban is using Karachi, Pakistan’s financial capital, to regroup, smuggle weapons and even work seasonal jobs, but of late the extremists have started working with criminal groups and are using Mafia-style network for kidnapping, robbing banks to generate funds for their counterparts based along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

Officials also admit that being the country’s financial nerve, Karachi has emerged a soft and favoured target of Taliban’s new business.

“There is overwhelming evidence that it’s an organized policy,” said Assistant Inspector General of the Karachi police, Dost Ali Baloch.

This is where they come to hide, where they raise their finances,” said a Karachi based counterterrorism official, on conditions of anonymity.

Taliban’s increasing involvement in organized crimes in the city can be gauged from the fact that about eighty percent of bank robberies conducted in the recent past are now believed to be related to the insurgency and other militant groups, The News York Times reports.

Officials believe that kidnapping for ransom may have been the single largest revenue source for the Taliban’s Pakistan chief Baitullah Mehsud, who was killed in a US drone strike earlier this month.

Karachi’s business community is the prime target of the insurgents.

“They’re real professionals. They know for sure that whoever they take can afford to pay,” said said Ahmed Chinoy, a textile manufacturer who is the deputy head of a citizens committee.

People are so perturbed and frightened by the deteriorating situation that they have started to take matters into their own hands, but they believe such steps are inadequate and the authorities must step-in.

“If we give, we’re in trouble, and if we don’t give, we’re in trouble. We’re being ground down in between,” said Abzal Khan Mehsud, a member of the Oil Tanker Owners Association.

“The worse the economy is, the more jihadis it will create.This is a money war,” said Idrees Gigi, a textile manufacturer in North Karachi. (ANI)

Akbar Bugti’s son files petition for murder case against Musharraf

Quetta (Pakistan), Aug.26 (ANI): Slain Baloch leader Nawab Akbar Bugti’s son, Jamil Akbar Bugti has filed a petition in the Sibbi District and Sessions Court seeking a court order to register a case against former President General Pervez Musharraf and other senior officials in connection with his father’s death.

Jamil Bugti, in his petition, has accused Musharraf and his associates of murdering Akbar Bugti.

The petition states that a case should be registered against Musharraf, former Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, former Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao and several others, The Daily Times reports.

Jamil’s counsel said the judge has summoned the IG and the Dera Bugti SHO to appear before the court on September 2.

Musharraf has already denied allegations of being involved in the Baloch leader’s murder.

Musharraf said Bugti’s death was an accident, and he was not killed by the security forces.

“During the operation, our three army officers and other jawans found Bugti in a cave and they had requested him to lay down arms and at the same time the cave collapsed and he was killed along with our officers,” Musharraf had said.

Musharraf said the government was compelled to initiate a military offensive in Balochistan as extremism was taking dangerous proportions in the region, he added that four hundred rockets were fired at Sui plant in a day and in such condition it had no option but to launch military operation in Balochistan. (ANI)

Zardari claims that Taliban has been defeated in Swat

Islamabad, Aug.19 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has claimed that the Taliban has been defeated in the Swat Valley.

In an interview with the News ahead of his meeting with US Special Envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke, Zardari said Pakistan was a united nation and would always stand united against its enemy.

“We are one nation and would stay united at every crucial moment to defeat the enemy,” Zardari said.

When asked how he viewed the meetings of Holbrooke with JUI chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman and JI Secretary General Liaquat Baloch, Zardari said: “Politics is the name of dialogue and issues could be sorted out only politically.”

When enquired how he would counter the opposition from some of parties like the JUI and the ANP on the issue of allowing political parties to work in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), he said all such issues would be sorted out with dialogues.

“People give up their positions, sometime, in view of national interest. So we will be able to manage this by moving from our standard positions on the subject,” Zardari said.

Later, Presidential spokesperson Farhatullah Babar told media persons that Zardari, during his meeting with Holbrooke, told the US ambassador that Pakistan’s industrial growth and export potential was severely hampered because of the war against the former Soviet Union as well as the rising militancy which was a result of the Cold War politics.

“If these factors had not hampered the country’s progress Pakistan would not have been faced with the type of economic problems it is facing today,” Babar quoted Zardari, as saying. (ANI)

‘US, India, Israel fanning sectarianism in Pak, Iran’

Karachi, June 22 (ANI): Pakistan’s religious party, Jama’at Islami, has claimed that India, US and Israel are fanning sectarianism in Pakistan and Iran as part of a conspiracy.

The News quoted Jama’at Islami General Secretary Liaquat Baloch, as saying that all three nations wanted to divide the Muslims on the basis of differences between various schools of thought.

Addressing the Ulema Convention under aegis of Jama’at Islami Central District, Baloch said the religious parties would have to combat the conspiracies waged against Islam under the present circumstances.

He demanded that the Pak government stop the military operation in NWFP province, and that the IDPs be rehabilitated in their areas.

He also said that his party does not believe in an armed struggle. (ANI)

Sufi Mohammad violating Quran teachings : Imran Khan

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Lahore, Apr.27 (ANI): Cricketer-turned politician Imran Khan has said that Tehrik-i-Nifaz Shariat-i-Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Sufi Mohammad is violating the teachings of the Quran./pp
Sufi Mohammad is not just violating the Swat accord; he is going against the Holy Quran by breaking promises, Khan, the chief of the Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf, said./pp
He condemned the TNSM chief for terming the country’s Constitution and judicial system as ‘un-Islamic’./pp
Khan said his party believed in the Constitution of the country and wanted its supremacy at any cost./pp
He also blamed former President General Pervez Musharraf for the chaos in Balochistan, and said if Musharraf had agreed to the demands of the Baloch people earlier, the region would not have been facing the turbulent situation that is being witnessed there currently./pp
Pakistan’s enemies, who benefited from wrong policies of the Musharraf regime, started a campaign to portray Pakistan as a failed state and hatched conspiracies for launching a separatist movement in Balochistan, the Dawn quoted Khan, as saying./pp
Khan also attacked MQM leader Altaf Husain for opposing the Swat peace deal./pp
Husain did not say anything about the inhuman treatment meted out to Dr Aafia Siddiqui by the US officials, but made an issue out of a ‘fake video of the flogging of a girl in Swat, he said, adding, Husain is the ‘biggest terrorist’ who had never been imprisoned because he was subservient to the US and the UK. (ANI)/p

Autonomy can only pacify deteriorating situation in Balochistan

Islamabad, Apr 22 (ANI): Pakistani lawmakers are of the view that only provincial autonomy could pacify the deteriorating situation in Balochistan and wipe out the sense of deprivation among smaller provinces.

The lawmakers also demanded judicial inquiry into the murder of three Baloch nationalist leaders in Turbat, Balochistan and stressed upon the government to implement recommendations of the special parliamentary committee on Balochistan.

Initiating debate over the adjournment motion regarding murder of the nationalist leaders and overall law and order situation in Balochistan, PPP Senator Lashkari Raisani said that measures taken for eliminating the sense of deprivation among the people of the province were vital for preventing the situation from getting worse.

He said dictators were responsible for the present situation, saying General Zia had turned Balochistan and NWFP into arms depots during the Afghan war, The Nation reported.

He demanded constitution of a fact-finding mission and a constitutional package for compensating the aggrieved people of the province.

ANP senator Zahid Khan, too, blamed General Zia regime for the present crises and demanded that provinces should be given the right over their resources.

He said Charter of Democracy was a precious document, but it couldn’t resolve the entire problems, as it lacked provision for provincial autonomy, which is the root cause of majority of the national problems.

Meanwhile, the legislators entered into a severe verbal brawl over the remarks of PML-N Senator Javed Ali Shah. After the ANP and tribal senators strongly protested, his remarks were expunged from the record. (ANI)

Baloch leader urges India, US to help attain freedom from Pakistan

Lahore, Apr.16 (ANI): Baloch Republican Party chief Brahamdagh Bugti has urged India and the United States to help the Baloch people attain freedom from Pakistan.

Bugti said Baloch people were being suppressed by the Pakistan Government which wants to take control of natural resources of the region.

“We will welcome India’s help for the Baloch people.We do not recognise the Constitution of 1973. We only want freedom,” The Daily Times quoted Bugti, as saying.

He charged the Pakistan government of discriminatory behaviour, and particularly targeting Baloch people in the military offensive being carried out in the region.

“The Baloch people have always been considered as slaves. They had been forced to put up resistance against the usurpation of their rights,” Bugti added.

Baloch people have long been demanding their right and control over the large deposits of natural gas and other resources which lies under the province’s geographical territory. They believe they are being bluffed by their government as the region still lacks basic amenities despite being rich in natural resources.

“Isn’t it a wrong that the people of the very district from where gas is being explored have to use wood for fire while the facility of gas is available in every house in Punjab,” Bugti said. (ANI)

Sharif wants Musharraf to be booked for violating constitution

Lahore, Apr 15 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif wants former President Pervez Musharraf to be booked for violating the constitution and sacking the judiciary.

Speaking at a function in Dubai, Sharif said Musharraf had “ignited a fire” in Balochistan by killing Baloch nationalist leader Nawab Akbar Bugti.

“The entire nation is suffering due to the killing of the Baloch leader and it is extremely essential to bring Musharraf to court,” he said.

The Daily Times quoted Sharif as saying that the former president had also derailed the process of composite dialogue with India by neglecting the Lahore Declaration that he had signed with the then Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

The PML-N chief said Pakistan did not need any foreign aid because its domestic needs could be met through its national resources.

Separately, in an interview with an Indian website, Nawaz said talks could be held with moderate Taliban including banned TTP chief Baitullah Mehsud.

He said he had no personal rivalry with President Asif Ali Zardari and only wanted to strengthen the democratic institutions in Pakistan. (ANI)

Zardari assures judicial probe in Baloch leaders’ killing

Islamabad, Apr. 14 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has assured a judicial investigation into the killing of the three Baloch leaders that caused rampant riots in Balochistan.The government will leave no stone unturned to expose the culprits involved in the murder of the Baloch leaders,” The Nation quoted Zardari, as saying.

Zardari, along with Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani interacted with PPP parliamentarians from NWFP at Monday at Aiwan-e-Sadr.

Some of the members informed Zardari about the issues confronting the NWFP, the problems being faced by the people of their areas and also suggested remedial measures.

Zardari asked them to take up their issues with the Awami National Party leadership, who were the leading coalition partners in the Province, and parliamentarians supported the efforts to bring normalcy in the violence-hit Province.

“They also supported the government move to take Parliament into confidence on the issue of Nizam-e-Adl Regulation,” sources said.

According to the sources, the meeting was a part of the consultative dialogue. he President apprised them of the current regional and political situation and invited their suggestions.

“We have worked out a comprehensive strategy to resolve all these outstanding issues,” Zardari said. (ANI)

Balochistan riots continue for fourth day

Quetta, Apr. 13 (ANI): One police constable has been killed and several others were injured in rampant riots that erupted in Balochistan following the murder of three Baloch nationalist leaders.

Banks, vehicles and government offices were set on fire in different towns and a complete wheel-jam and shutter-down strike paralyzed life in Balochistan, The Nation reports.

The strike call was jointly given by all Baloch nationalist parties.

During the fourth day of Balochistan violence, all shops and business centres remained closed on Sariab Road, Brewery Road, Liaquat Bazaar, Jinnah Road, Joint Road and other areas in Quetta.

Angry mob blocked various roads of the city by burning old tires and erecting barricades. Different groups of protestors pelted stones on vehicles in different areas.

“Due to timely action, fire was extinguished and bank was saved from complete destruction by fire-brigade,” said a police official.

Strict security arrangements were made in provincial capital where police backed by Frontier Corps and Balochistan Constabulary were deployed in different areas to maintain law and order.

Protesters blocked the Quetta-Karachi highway at two places in Mastung.

Pak-Iran and Quetta-Sibi national highways were also blocked in different areas. (ANI)

Nine shot dead as riots continue in south-western Pakistan

Islamabad – At least nine people, including a policeman, were killed Saturday as the riots over the assassination of three ethnic political leaders continued for a third day in Pakistan’s south-western Balochistan province. A police official said the bodies of six coal miners were found in outskirts of provincial capital Quetta.

“The attackers first kidnapped the poor labourers, shot them dead and dumped their bodies in the mountains in Marwar area,” police investigator Barkatullah Khan said.

He said two of the victims were from North Western Frontier Province and four from the Pakistani part of the Kashmir region. “Apparently the incident seems part of ongoing violence,” Khan added.

Unknown attackers shot dead a policeman in the town of Quetta, where two civilians also died and two were injured in various incidents of violence.

Ethnic Baloch groups fighting for more political autonomy and a greater share in profits from natural resources exploited in Balochistan are suspected of carrying out the attacks on civilians from other provinces and law enforcers.

The government forces have tried to suppress the insurgency which has left hundreds of people, including nationalists and security personnel dead, over the last four years.

The riots erupted in various areas of the province on Thursday when the police found the bodies of three Baloch nationalists, allegedly killed by country’s intelligence agencies.

On Saturday, angry protesters torched a government building and three banks in Turbat, some 650 kilometres south of Quetta.

The markets remained closed across the province and nationalists held protest rallies in many cities. (dpa)